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“They Did to Him Whatever They Pleased”: The Exercise of Political Power within Matthew’s Narrative
Introduction
To read the Gospel of Matthew within the global context is to read Matthew’s narrative
against the backdrop of the urgent issues and challenges that face the global community as a
whole and individual nations each in turn. One such challenge concerns the exercise of political
power within the public arena and the honesty and integrity with which such power is exercised.
Frequently such honesty and integrity become casualties of political expedience and the
overweening drive to gain and retain power at all costs. Stories of lavish life styles, corruption,
election fraud, assassination of rival politicians, torture and abuse of those who represent a
political threat, repression of political opponents, and oppression of the powerless fill our
television screens, our airwaves, and our newspapers with dismal frequency. Such recent
geopolitical flash points as Myanmar, Kenya, Pakistan, Zimbabwe, Gaza, and Georgia are
merely current illustrations of an ongoing and global reality. And the ongoing American “war
against terror”—which includes such dubious features as “extraordinary rendition” to foreign
prisons, the US detention facilities at Guantanamo Bay, and “enhanced interrogation techniques”
(read “waterboarding” for one prominent example)—brings the exercise of political power into
our own national life daily as a moral issue facing all those of us who are citizens of the US.
The Gospel Writer Matthew lived in a world little different from our own in this regard.
In the course of his story about Jesus of Nazareth Matthew also paints a vivid portrait of the
political power brokers of Jesus’ world and the unsavory, cynical, and often brutal methods that
they use to achieve their goals. From beginning (2:1-23) to ending (28:11-15) Matthew’s
narrative offers pointed and graphic depictions of political power as it is wielded by those in
authority and as it impacts the lives of those who live and die within its domain. Accordingly, to
read Matthew’s Gospel with a focus on the exercise of political power is to discover a world
astonishingly similar to the 21st-century world that we inhabit.
The following study will examine Matthew’s narrative portrait of the first-century
political leaders, both Roman and Jewish, who exercise power in the public arena of Palestine
and the wider Roman Empire. Part one of the paper will examine the Roman and Jewish leaders
within Matthew’s narrative and the methods they employ to gain, retain, and exercise their
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political power. Part two will assess the effectiveness and/or ineffectiveness of such uses of
power, as Matthew portrays this through the rhetoric of his overall narrative. Part three will offer
brief pointers toward Matthew’s contrasting portrait of positive leadership patterns as reflected in
the ministry of Jesus. A brief conclusion will assess Matthew’s overall narrative rhetoric as a tool
for fruitful reflection on the use of political power within our 21st-century global community.
I. Rulers, Great Ones, and Vineyard Tenants: A Matthean Portrait of Political Power
On all counts Matthew’s Gospel is a deeply political document. Not only is its central
and prominent agenda the proclamation of the “kingdom of heaven”/“kingdom of God”
(h J ba s i lei va t w'n oujr an o w'n/t ou' qeou'), a factor which in itself establishes the thoroughly
political character of Matthew’s message.1 But in addition Matthew’s narrative of the life, death,
and resurrection of Jesus is intricately interwoven from beginning to end with the realities and
the structures of political power, both Roman and Jewish, in place within first-century Palestine.
Matthew has barely begun his narrative before he recounts in vivid fashion (2:1-23) the interface
between the birth of Jesus Messiah (1:1, 16, 17, 18) and the political power structures in
Jerusalem (2:1-23).2 Throughout Matthew’s narrative the life of Jesus is profoundly shaped by
ongoing interaction with the political powers of the day, whether Roman3 or Jewish.4 And the
penultimate incident of Matthew’s Gospel (28:11-15) is one that pointedly highlights the
political response of the Jewish leadership to the resurrection of Jesus and the ongoing impact of
that political response from the time of Jesus on into the world of Matthew’s own church.5
1 Thus the following ba s i l ei va references throughout Matthew referring variously to the realm of God: 3:2; 4:17, 23; 5:3, 10, 19, 20; 6:10, 13, 33; 7:21; 8:11, 12; 9:35; 10:7; 11:11, 12; 12:28; 13:11, 19, 24, 31, 33, 38, 41, 43, 44, 45, 47, 52; 16:19, 28; 18:1, 3, 4, 23; 19:12, 14, 23, 24; 20:1, 21; 21:31, 43; 22:2; 23:13; 24:14; 25:1, 34; 26:29. Note also the Matthean references to earthly “kingdoms”: 4:8; 12:25, 26; 24:7. 2 For a fuller discussion of the political portrait painted within 2:1-23 see Dorothy Jean Weaver, “Power and Powerlessness: Matthew’s Use of Irony in the Portrayal of Political Leaders,” in Treasures New and Old: Recent Contributions to Matthean Studies, Symposium Series, no. 1, eds. David R. Bauer and Mark Allen Powell (Atlanta: Scholars Press, 1996), pp. 182-187. 3 Thus, for example, 8:5-13; 14:1-12; 27:11-37. 4 Thus, for example, Jesus’ constant interactions with the Jewish authorities throughout the Gospel. But note in specific such texts as the following: 12:9-14; 16:21-23; 20:17-19; 21:33-46; 23:1-39. 5 For a fuller discussion of the political portrait painted within 28:11-15 see Dorothy Jean Weaver, “‘Thus You Will Know Them by Their Fruits’: The Roman Characters of the Gospel of Matthew,” in The Gospel of Matthew in Its Roman Imperial Context, JSNTS, no. 276, eds. John Riches and David C. Sim (New York: T & T Clark, 2005), pp. 122-124.
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The political currents that run through Matthew’s narrative are, on the one hand, Jewish
in character, corresponding both individually and collectively to the various Jewish parties and
leaders identified throughout the Gospel: Pharisees,6 Sadducees,7 elders [of the people],8 chief
priests and high priest,9 scribes [of the people],10 and Herodians.11 By all accounts within
Matthew’s Gospel these are people and groups vested with significant authority within the
Jewish community. Jesus himself acknowledges this authority as he speaks to them and to
others. In the imagery of one of Jesus’ allegorical parables (21:33-46) the chief priests and
Pharisees recognize themselves as the “tenants”12 (i.e., leaders) to whom the “landowner”13/
“owner of the vineyard”14 (i.e., God) has entrusted the “vineyard”15 (i.e., the people of Israel).16
Jesus likewise announces to his disciples and the Jerusalem crowds gathered in the temple (23:2-
3a): “The scribes and the Pharisees sit on Moses’ seat; therefore, do whatever they teach you and
follow it . . . .”17 And the authority of these leaders also reaches well beyond the Jewish
community. They are the biblical scholars to whom Herod the king appeals successfully for
information concerning the birth of the Messiah (2:4-6). They are likewise the Jewish
community leaders who have the political standing not only to gain audience with Pilate, the
6Thus o i J F a ri s a i 'o i: 3:7; 5:20; 9:11, 14, 34; 12:2, 14, 24, 38; 15:1, 12; 16:1, 6, 11, 12; 19:3; 21:45; 22:15, 34, 41; 23:2, 13, 15, 23, 25, 26, 27, 29; 27:62. 7 Thus o i J S a dd ou ka i 'o i: 3:7; 16:1, 6, 11, 12; 22:23, 34. 8 Thus o i J p r es bu vt ero i [tou ' l a ou ']: 15:2; 16:21; 21:23; 26:3, 47, 57, 59; 27:1, 3, 12, 20, 41; 28:12. 9 Thus oJ a jrc i er eu v"/o i J a jrc i er ei '": 2:4; 16:21; 20:18; 21:15, 23, 45; 26:3, 14, 47, 51, 57, 58, 59, 62, 63, 65; 27:1, 3, 6, 12, 20, 41, 62; 28:11. 10 Thus o i J g ra m m a tei '" [ tou ' l a ou ']: 2:4; 5:20; 7:29; 8:19; 9:3; 12:38; 15:1; 16:21; 17:10; 20:18; 21:15; 23:2, 13, 15, 23, 25, 27, 29; 26:3, 57; 27:41. 11 Thus @H r w/di a n o i ': 22:16. 12 Thus o i J g ewr go i v: 21:33, 34, 35, 38, 40. 13 Thus oJ o i j ko d es p ovt h": 21:33. 14 Thus oJ ku vri o " t ou ' a jm p el w 'n o ": 21:40. 15 Thus oJ a jm p el wvn: 21:33, 39, 40, 41. 16 The imagery of Israel as the “vineyard” of God is well known within the Jewish community, as reflected in the prophecy of Isaiah 5:1-7. Cf. also other Matthean parables of Jesus focused on the imagery of the “vineyard” (20:1, 2, 4. 7, 8; 21:28). 17 All translations reflect the New Revised Standard Version unless otherwise indicated.
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Roman governor (27:62) but also, by the same token, to turn prisoners over to Pilate for trial
within the Roman jurisdiction (27:1-2). And much of Matthew’s narrative focuses on the
interchange between Jesus and these political leaders of the Jewish community.
But there are other political currents running through Matthew’s narrative as well. These
currents are Roman in character; and they correspond to the levels and structures of the Roman
Empire visible and active within the “occupied territory” of first-century Palestine.18 The Roman
authorities within Matthew’s narrative create a vast hierarchy of power which rules in imperial
fashion over the entire Mediterranean world, Palestine included. As Matthew tells the story, this
hierarchy includes the Roman emperor,19 client kings ruling Judea and Galilee on behalf of
Rome,20 the Roman governor of Palestine,21 Roman military officers such as centurions,22 and
the rank and file of Roman soldiers,23 organized into legions of 6,000,24 cohorts of 600,25 and
centuria of 100.26 In speaking to his disciples Jesus identifies this hierarchy of Roman imperial
power as “the rulers of the Gentiles” (o i J a[rcon t e s t w'n ejqn w'n: 20:25b) and “their great ones”
(o i J megavlo i: 20:25c). And Jesus implicitly acknowledges the authority of the emperor as he
challenges the Pharisees (22:21b), “Give therefore to the emperor the things that are the
emperor’s . . . .”27 And while much of Matthew’s narrative situates Jesus in intramural
18 For a detailed discussion of the Roman imperial system in place within the first-century Mediterranean world, see Warren Carter, Matthew and Empire: Initial Explorations (Harrisburg, PA: Trinity Press International, 2001), pp. 9-53. 19 Thus oJ ka i 's a r: 22:17, 21. 20 Thus oJ ba s i l eu v": 2:1, 3, 9; 14:9 cf. 10:18; 11:8; oJ te tra v r c h": 14:1. 21 Thus oJ hJ gem wvn: 27:2, 11, 14, 15, 21, 23, 27; 28:14; cf. 10:18. 22 Thus oJ eJ ka tovn ta rc o ": 8:5, 13; 27:54. 23 Thus oJ s t ra ti wv th": 8: 9; 27:27; 28:12; cf. 2:16; 14:10. 24 Thus oJ l e gew vn: 26:53. 25 Thus hJ s p ei vra: 27:27. 26 Cf. 8:5, 13; 27:54. For a fuller discussion of the Roman imperial powers visible and active within Matthew’s narrative see Weaver, “‘Thus You Will Know Them by Their Fruits,’” pp. 107-114. Strikingly, however, the most visible face of the Roman Empire within the world of Matthew’s Gospel is that of the Jewish “tax collectors” (5:46; 9:9, 10, 11, 12, 13; 10:3; 11:19; 18:17; 21:31, 32; cf. 17:25-26; 22:15-22), who collaborate with the Roman overlords as they collect Roman taxes from their Jewish compatriots. 27 Cf. 17:25, where Jesus asks Peter, “What do you think, Simon? From whom do kings of the earth take toll or tribute? From their children or from others?”
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interaction with the Jewish community, it is Jesus’ extramural interaction with the Roman
imperial powers that both sets the stage for Matthew’s narrative (2:1-23) and drives it inexorably
toward its conclusion (27:1-2, 11-37).
Clearly there are significant social differences between the Jewish community portrayed
in Matthew’s Gospel, with its religious parties and temple functionaries, and the Roman Empire,
with its political/military hierarchy extending from the emperor down to the common foot
soldier. And there is likewise a vast power differential between the Jewish and Roman
communities of Matthew’s Gospel, the inherent differential between the occupying power and
the occupied people. Within Matthew’s Gospel this power differential is reflected most
prominently in the unhindered prerogative of the Roman imperial forces to engage in military
“search and destroy” missions in the face of political threats (2:1-23), to employ capital
punishment as a routine sanction against its subject peoples (20:18-19; 27:1-2, 11-37), and to
quash political uprisings with massive military force (cf. 21:33-46; 22:1-7; 24:1-2).
But what is perhaps most striking about Matthew’s portrayal of these two highly distinct
communities are the commonalities that their leaders exhibit as they exercise political power
within their respective domains. While not all political strategies are reflected equally in both
communities according to Matthew’s narrative, there are far greater commonalities than
differences in their respective political initiatives.
Lavish Lifestyles. Surely one of the most ubiquitous symbols of political power is the
lavish life style that frequently accompanies and displays the wealth of the powerful. And on
this front the political leaders of Matthew’s narrative, whether Roman or Jewish, do not
disappoint. While Matthew’s depictions are spare by comparison with his Markan sources,28 the
images are nevertheless pointed and vivid. One indicator of lavish life style is dress. As
Matthew indicates, those who live in “royal palaces” ( o i J o i [k o i t w'n ba s i levwn: 11:8) likewise
dress themselves in “soft robes” (t a; ma la k av:11:8a/b) of rich colors29 and wear “crowns”
28 Cf., for example, Mt. 14:1-12 with Mk. 6:14-29. 29 Thus the “scarlet robe” of 27:28. Clearly, in this context, for the soldiers to dress Jesus in a “scarlet robe” is to dress him in the attire of a “king,” a symbolic mockery made indisputable by the addition of the “crown of thorns” (27:29a), the “reed” scepter (27:29b), and the acclamation, “Hail, King of the Jews!” (27:29c). While kings in fact wear purple (thus Mk. 15:17, 20), Matthew has exchanged the “purple cloak” of Mark for a “scarlet robe,” the attire of a Roman foot soldier and thus a readily accessible garment. Cf. Douglas R. A. Hare, Matthew (Louisville, KY: John Knox Press, 1993), p. 318. But see Rev. 17:3, 4; 18:12, 16 for mention of “scarlet” as a color of wealth and luxury.
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(st evf an o ": 27:29) denoting their royalty. And in order to join in the festivities of a royal
wedding celebration it is necessary to wear an appropriately lavish “wedding robe”
(e{n duma gavmo u: 22:11, 12). The Jewish leaders of Matthew’s Gospel, while they do not wear
royal attire, nevertheless distinguish themselves extravagantly in the pious dress of their own
religious community as they “make their phylacteries broad and their fringes long” (23:5b).
But lavish lifestyle goes far beyond matters of dress. Royal banquets—whether for
weddings (22:1-14) or for birthday celebrations (14:1-12)—are likewise lavish events, with
formal invitations,30 a roomful of guests reclining at table,31 a menu of choice meats (thus “oxen”
and “fat calves”: 22:4),32 and fine dancing to entertain the king and his guests (14:6). Such royal
banquets can also be the occasion for extravagant and conspicuous gift-giving to honor and
award those in favor with the king. For her “pleasing” dance in front of Herod the tetrarch and
his guests (14:6), Herod rewards the daughter of Herodias, “promis[ing] her on oath”—in the
presence of his guests (14:9)—“to grant her whatever she might ask” (14:7).33 The Jewish
leaders may not be on the invited guest list for royal birthday parties or royal wedding banquets.
But within their own community they are not to be outdone when it comes to conspicuous
celebration. In Jesus’ words (23:6), “[The scribes and Pharisees] love to have the place of honor
(t h jn p r wt o k li s ivan ]) at banquets.” The motif of lavish living and conspicuous celebration
clearly connects the political leaders of Matthew’s Gospel, Roman and Jewish alike, within a
common lifestyle of privilege.
“I Say to One, ‘Go’”: The Power of Command. No doubt the most basic and symbolic
aspect of political power is the prerogative of political leaders to accomplish their goals by
commanding others to carry out their decrees. The iconic image of the king on the throne issuing
commands for his subjects to fulfill has been the stuff of folk tales and mythology for thousands
of years of human society. And such power of command, whether exercised by kings or by other
political leaders, is in fact the stuff of lived experience for people in all kinds of societies and
30 Thus o i J k e kkl hm evn o i: 22:3, 4. 31 Thus a jn a kei m evn o i: 22:10, 11; s u n a n a kei m evn o i: 14:9. 32 Thus o i J ta u 'r o i . . . ka i [ ta [ s i ti s ta v: 22:4. For further mention of the “fatted calf” as the prime menu for a banquet, cf. s i teu tov" (Lk. 15:23, 27, 30). 33 Cf. Mark’s version of the same incident (6:23), where the extravagance of Herod’s act is made explicit in his promise to give Herodias’ daughter anything she might wish up to “half of [his] kingdom.”
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social structures. Matthew’s narrative, as a portrayal of the social community of the eastern
Mediterranean world in the first century, depicts the exercise of power of command in ways
characteristic to that world and that historical moment in time.
Within Matthew’s narrative it is the Roman leaders and their proxies who exercise power
of command in straightforward and uncomplicated fashion. From the top to the bottom of the
Roman hierarchy political leaders or their agents simply issue commands which must be obeyed.
Herod the king (2:1-23) has authority to “call”34 people of prominence into his presence—
including the local intelligentsia (2:4a: “all the chief priests and scribes of the people”) and
foreign dignitaries (2:7a: the wise men)—and to interrogate them35 in order to acquire crucial
information (2:4b-6; 2:7b, 16c). By the same token Herod likewise has the authority to “send” 36
people out to do his bidding. The wise men “set out” for Bethlehem (2:9) when Herod “sends”
them (2:8); and Herod’s henchmen carry out the gruesome task which he “sends” them to do
(2:16). In similar fashion Herod the tetrarch (14:1-12) has straightforward authority to
“command” that the head of John the Baptist be given to Herodias’ daughter (k eleuv w: 14:9c)
and to “send” and have John beheaded in the prison” (ajp o st evl lw 14:10). And Pilate the Roman
governor (27:1-2, 11-27) exercises similar power of command as he “releases Barabbas”
(ajp o luvw: 27:26a) and “hands [Jesus] over to be crucified” (p a r a di vdw mi: 27:26b).
Farther down the Roman hierarchy centurions (cf. 8:5-13) have similar, if lesser,
authority to command. As one such Roman centurion explains to Jesus, “. . . I also am a man
under authority, with soldiers under me; and I say to one, ‘Go,’ and he goes, and to another,
‘Come,’ and he comes, and to my slave, ‘Do this,’ and the slave does it” (8:9). And even
common foot soldiers in the Roman army can “force” others to carry burdens for a mile, some as
onerous as the wooden cross on which a condemned criminal is about to be crucified (ajg ga reuvw:
5:41; 27:32). Clearly the Roman imperial forces active in Palestine have no hesitation and find
no hindrance in exercising their power of command over those under their authority.
The Jewish political leaders of Matthew’s narrative are not portrayed as exhibiting the
same power of command. To the contrary they find it necessary to use alternative means to
accomplish their goals. To accomplish the arrest of Jesus, they must make a financial deal with
34 Thus s u n a vgw: 2:4; ka l evw: 2:7. 35 Thus p u n q a vn o m a i:2:4; ajkri bov w: 2:7. 36 Thus p evm p w: 2:8; a jp o s tevl l w: 2:16.
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Judas Iscariot, offering him money for services rendered (26:14-16). In order to ensure a Roman
verdict against Jesus, they must “persuade” (p ei vq w: 27:20) the Jewish crowds in Jerusalem to
demand Jesus’ death. And to quash any potential story of Jesus’ resurrection, they must bribe
the Roman guards with “a large sum of money” (aj rguvr i a i Jk an av: 28:12b) to disseminate a
fabricated account about the empty tomb (28:11-15). What the Roman leaders can accomplish
by simple command requires strategy, persuasion, and money on the part of the Jewish leaders.
And such is the power differential between the “occupiers’ and the “occupied.”
First-Century “Photo-Ops”: Public Relations Initiatives. The terminology of “photo-ops”
and the underlying political strategy of taking highly visible actions designed to impress the
public and enhance one’s popularity as a political figure have become a ubiquitous constant of
present-day politics. Unforgettable images abound, from the 1993 handshake of Yitzhak Rabin
and Yasser Arafat on the White House lawn to the 2003 speech of George W. Bush on a US
aircraft carrier in front of a huge sign reading “Mission Accomplished” and well beyond. But
while the “photos” of “photo-op” have been around only for some 150 years, the “opportunistic”
political strategy behind the “photo-op” is no doubt as ancient as politics itself. And within
Matthew’s narrative the Jewish leaders, who have little access to simple power of command, are
depicted as masters of the art of acting for public viewing and approval.
One of Jesus’ persistent charges against the scribes and Pharisees is that they do their
deeds in order to be “seen”37 and “praised”38 by others. They “sound trumpets . . . in the
synagogues and in the streets” to announce their acts of almsgiving (6:2). They “stand and pray”
conspicuously “in the synagogues and at the street corners” (6:5). They “disfigure their faces” to
publicize their acts of fasting (6:16). They “make their phylacteries broad and their fringes long”
to display their piety in highly visible fashion to all who see them (23:5). They delight in public
honor of all types: the “place of honor” (t h jn p r w t o k li s ivan) at banquets (23:6a), the “best seats”
(t aj" p r wt o k a qedr i va ") in the synagogues (23:6b), respectful “greetings” (t ouJ" ajsp a s mo uv") in
the marketplaces (23:7a), and the honorific title “rabbi” (23:7b). In the face of all this evidence
Jesus concludes that the scribes and Pharisees resemble “whitewashed tombs” which “look
beautiful (f a i vn on t a i wJr a i vo i)” externally but on the inside reflect a very different reality (23:27).
37 Thus fa i vn w: 6:5, 16; 23:27, 28; q ea vo m a i: 23:5; cf. 6:1. 38 Thus do x a vz w: 6:2.
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And in non-parabolic language he charges that they “look righteous (f a i vn es qe . . . di jk a i o i)” on
the outside, while being “full of hypocrisy and lawlessness” on the inside (23:28).
On the Roman front the portrait is noticeably different. For the most part Matthew offers
no similar “opportunistic” depictions of the Roman imperial powers within his narrative, most
likely suggesting that Matthew does not generally view them as either needing or attempting to
curry favor with the Jewish populace under their military control.39 By comparison with their
Jewish counterparts, the Romans are engaged in no “hearts and minds” operation. Instead, as
will be detailed below, the Romans routinely employ violence and military force to enact the will
of the empire. The prominent exception to this rule, however, is reflected in the annual crowd-
pleasing gesture of Pilate, the Roman governor, at Passover, when his custom is “to release a
prisoner for the crowd, anyone whom they [want]” (27:15; emphasis mine). Here Pilate
knowingly suspends his own powers of Roman jurisdiction and submits himself intentionally to
the will of the Jewish crowd gathered in Jerusalem for the Passover. Clearly Pilate welcomes the
approval of the crowd when he can gain it in opportunistic ways. And the highly public context
within which Pilates exercises this political gesture (“so after they had gathered”: 27:17a)
demonstrates without question Pilate’s interest in the greatest possible political benefit. Clearly
the 21st-century “photo-op” has a long and well-practiced history.
Political Expedience: Acquiescence to the Necessary. Just one small step beyond the
ubiquitous political art of self-initiated action for public appearance lie the “expedient” responses
forced on the political leader by external political necessity. Such actions clearly demonstrate
the character of the political leader(s) in question by revealing the lengths to which they will go
to do what is politically necessary, even when such actions contravene their own original
intentions. And such actions likewise demonstrate the fundamental weakness of political leaders
who find themselves forced into actions they have not chosen. Within his narrative Matthew
indicts both Roman and Jewish leaders alike on the charge of political expedience.
The Jewish leaders, for their part, take politically expedient actions largely due to “fear”40
of “the crowds”/“the people.”41 When Jesus asks the chief priests and the elders a question about
39 Here I distinguish between unforced political opportunism of the “photo-op” variety and political expediency, in which political leaders are forced by political circumstances beyond their control into political actions that they would not otherwise take. Matthew charges Roman and Jewish leaders alike with “political expediency.” On this point, see below. 40 Thus fo b evo m a i: 21:26, 46.
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John the Baptist (21:24-25a), they rehearse the two possible responses which Jesus has offered
them and the respective risks involved (21:25b-26: “If we say . . . But if we say . . .”). And
while they consider the shame that they would encounter for failing to “believe” one who has
come “from heaven” (21:25b), it is ultimately their “fear” of the “crowd,” who “regard John as a
prophet” (21:26), that forces them to save their political reputations by responding, “We do not
know” (21:27). When Jesus tells an allegorical parable in which the chief priests and the
Pharisees recognize their own role as the villains (21:33-44 cf. 21:45), their immediate desire is
to “arrest” Jesus (21:46a). But here as before their “fear” of the “crowds” prevents them from
taking action, because the crowds regard not only John the Baptist but Jesus himself as a
“prophet” (21:46b). And even when the chief priests and the elders of the people gather at the
palace of the high priest and conspire “to arrest Jesus by stealth and kill him” (26:4), their plans
are constricted (“Not during the festival . . .” [26:5a]) by their fear of the “riot” that may ensue
“among the people” (i Jn a mh ; q ovrubo " gevn h t a i ej n t w'/ la w'/: 26:5b).
In 27:3-10 the political expedience of the Jewish leaders appears to emerge from their
fear of losing their reputation as those who do what “is lawful.”42 Faced with the need to dispose
of the coins that Judas throws down in the temple (27:5a), the chief priests and the elders
conclude that “It is not lawful (oujk e[x est i n) to put them into the treasury, since they are blood
money” (27:6). Their concern, ironically, lies not with the self-acknowledged truth that they
have paid out “blood money” in the first place, but merely with the technical “legality” of putting
such money into the temple treasury.43 As a result they spend this money for an alternative and
apparently “lawful” project, a burial field for foreigners (27:7-8).
But just as the Jewish leaders find themselves forced into expedient actions by their fear
of the crowds, so also do the Roman imperial powers. Matthew’s portrayal of Herod the tetrarch
(14:1-12) shows him to be little more than a puppet on a string vis-à-vis the other characters in
the story.44 Herod has arrested and imprisoned John the Baptist due to John’s outspoken political
41 Thus oJ o[c l o "/o i J o[c l o i: 21:26, 46; cf. oJ l a ov": 26:5. 42 Thus e{x es ti n: 27:6. Cf. 12:2, 4, 10, 12; 14:4; 19:3; 20:15; 22:17. 43 Cf. the remark of Hare (p. 313) on the expedient action of the Jewish leaders: “While [the Jewish leaders] openly deny their guilt . . . , they are compelled to concede that they cannot receive the money as a temple offering, because it is ‘blood money’” (emphasis mine). 44 For a fuller discussion of Herod the tetrarch, see Weaver, “Power and Powerlessness,” pp. 187-191.
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bluntness concerning Herod’s marital affairs (14:3-5a). But when he wants to kill John, Herod
finds his hands politically tied, since he “fear[s] the crowd,” who “regard [John the Baptist] as a
prophet” (14:5b). Later Herod is “grieved” at the request of Herodias’ daughter, on behalf of her
mother, for the head of John the Baptist (14:9a). But because he has just made an extravagant
and highly public oath in front of a roomful of guests (14:6-7), Herod is forced once again into
expedient action, this time “out of regard for his oaths and for the guests” (14:9b). John the
Baptist ultimately loses his head because Herod fears the entire cast of characters at the
banquet—his consort Herodias (14:8a, 11b), Herodias’ daughter (14:6-7, 8b, 11a), and the guests
reclining at table with him (14:6, 9b). And Herod’s wide-ranging fear gives rise to political
expediency of the most obvious and unprincipled sort.
Matthew’s portrait of Pilate, the Roman governor, shows Pilate to be equally fearful of
the crowds and equally skilled at the art of the expedient.45 Like Herod the tetrarch, Pilate has
tied his own hands politically in advance by establishing a completely open-ended and
unquestionably crowd-pleasing Passover precedent vis-à-vis his Jewish subjects, namely “to
release a prisoner for the crowd, anyone whom they wanted (27:15b; emphasis mine).
Accordingly, when the crowd calls for the release of Barabbas (27:20-21) and demands that
Jesus be crucified (27:22-23), Pilate has no other politically feasible options to consider. He
knows that the Jewish leaders have acted out of “jealousy” in handing Jesus over (27:18). He
has learned of the dream that his wife has had concerning “that righteous man”
(t w'/ di k a i vw/ ejk eivn w/: 27:19b, DJW). And he knows that Jesus has “done no evil” (cf. 27:23a).
So Pilate argues briefly with the crowds (27:23). But when a “riot” ensues (27:24a), Pilate
knows that the game is up. Having given away his own political authority well in advance and
fully aware of the extreme political danger associated with “riots,”46 Pilate now has no choice but
to do the politically expedient by “releasing Barabbas” for the Jewish crowd and “handing
[Jesus] over to be crucified” (27:26).47 Doing the politically expedient is clearly a typical modus
operandi for the political leaders of Matthew’s narrative, Jewish and Roman alike.
45 For a fuller discussion of Pilate, see Weaver, “Power and Powerlessness,” pp. 191-195. 46 Cf. the similar fear of the Jewish leaders concerning the outbreak of a “riot” in 26:5. 47 Contra Carter (p. 165), Matthew’s emphatic threefold indication of Jesus’ innocence, depicted as in the mind (27:18), in the hearing (27:19b), and on the tongue (19:23a) of Pilate himself, invites the reader to conclude that Pilate acts in spite of his own better knowledge and instincts.
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“Campaign Rhetoric”: Verbal Attack and the Art of Persuasion. To read the Matthean
accounts of the controversies between the Jewish leaders and Jesus is to enter a world that
strongly resembles a 21st-century election campaign between rival politicians. Here the Jewish
leaders are mounting what appears to be an energetic political campaign in front of the Jewish
crowds to discredit and defeat their political opponent, Jesus, and to win over the hearts and
minds of the Jewish people for themselves.
The strategies that they adopt in this campaign are the standard tools of all political
campaigns: verbal attacks on the opponent and persuasion of the supporters. The Jewish leaders
open their campaign with virtually inaudible muttering (9:3, 4); but their attacks escalate to
direct verbal challenges48 and public pronouncements against Jesus (9:32-34; 12:22-24). They
work indirectly, challenging Jesus’ disciples on the actions of their “teacher” (9:10-13); and they
take Jesus to task conversely for the actions of his “disciples” (12:1-8; 15:1-9) and the words of
the children in the temple (21:14-16). They question Jesus “maliciously” (t h ;n p on h r ivan: 22:18;
cf. p on h r av: 9:4) in public settings ranging from Galilean synagogues to the Jerusalem temple, in
order to “accuse” him (k at h go revw: 12:10), to “test” him (p ei r avz w: 16:1; 19:3; 22:35), and to
“entrap” him (p agi deuvw: 22:15). They demand that he show them “signs [from heaven]”
(12:38-42; 16:1-4). They challenge him to his face (21:23-27) and denounce him before the
Jewish crowds in public proclamations (9:32-34; 12:22-24).
The campaign rhetoric of the Jewish leaders sounds two prominent themes. On the one
hand the Jewish leaders challenge Jesus persistently on the question of what is “lawful” or “not
lawful” ( e[ xest i n/oujk e[x est i n): plucking grain on the sabbath (12:1-8); healing on the sabbath
(12:9-14); divorcing one’s wife “for any cause” (19:3-9); and paying taxes to the emperor
(22:15-22). In a similar vein they accuse Jesus’ disciples of “break[ing] the tradition of the
elders” by failing to “wash their hands before they eat” (15:2); and they castigate Jesus himself
for “eat[ing] with tax collectors and sinners” (9:11). And to underscore their concerns about the
law they “test” Jesus concerning the “greatest commandment in the law” (22:35-36).
But just as crucial to their rhetorical strategy is the challenge that the Jewish leaders raise
with regard to Jesus’ “authority” (ejxo us i va: 9:8; 21:23, 24, 27). They charge Jesus with
“blasphemy” for pronouncing forgiveness of sins, while the crowds “[glorify] God, who [has]
given such authority to human beings” (9:8; emphasis mine). They denounce Jesus as one who
48 Thus 9:10-13; 12:1-8, 9-14, 38-42; 15:1-9; 16:1-4; 19:3-9; 21:14-16, 23-27; 22:15-22, 34-40.
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casts out demons “by [Beelzebul], the ruler of the demons” (9:34; 12:24; cf. 10:25) and thus
implicitly not by the “authority” of God. And after Jesus has turned the temple upside down and
thoroughly disrupted their financial enterprise (21:12-13), the chief priests and elders of the
people accost Jesus as he teaches in the temple and put the question to him directly: “By what
authority are you doing these things, and who gave you this authority?” (21:23b).
Ultimately, however, the success or failure of the Jewish political campaign to discredit
Jesus and bring about his demise rests on the ability of the Jewish leaders to rally their own
supporters, convince them vis-à-vis the cause in question, and engage them in effective political
action. Throughout the Galilean segment of Matthew’s narrative there is no evidence of any
such successful efforts by the Jewish leaders at public persuasion. But at the most critical
moment for their strategic purposes, Jesus’ trial before Pilate, the Jewish power brokers in
Jerusalem, the chief priests and the elders, finally succeed in their political efforts as they
“[persuade] (p ei vq w) the crowds to ask for Barabbas and to have Jesus killed” (27:20).
Matthew offers no hints as to how the Jewish leaders carry out this political “persuasion.”
All the readers witness is the outcome of their “persuasive” efforts. And to judge from the
evidence at hand, this “persuasion” is hardly built on a nuanced argument which can be debated
on the merits. Rather, the crowd has clearly been offered a standard “party line” response which
can be supported only by increasingly vociferous repetition. When Pilate seeks to engage the
crowds in rational discussion of the logic of their decision against Jesus—“Why, what evil has he
done?” (27:23a)—the crowds have no reasoned argumentation to offer. Instead they merely
repeat the “party line” that they have apparently been given by the Jewish leaders: “Let him be
crucified!” (27:23b). And, far from judicial debate, it is the ensuing “riot” (q ovrubo ": 27:24a)
caused by screaming crowds shouting their verdict repetitiously (27:23)49 that brings about the
desired political results. Pilate, who attempts to debate the judicial merits of the case in front of
him (27:23a), ultimately accedes to the will of a screaming mob (27:23b-24a) and carries out
their wishes (27:24b-26). To this extent the efforts of the Jewish leaders at political persuasion
are indeed successful. And just days later they announce with confidence that they can
“persuade” (p ei vq w: 28:14; DJW) the governor himself, if political circumstances demand such
action. Clearly the power of persuasion is a critical skill for the Jewish leadership in their
political enterprise as the community organizers of the Jewish people.
49 The imperfect form of the verb e[kra z on in 27:23b clearly implies the repetitious character of the shouting.
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The portrait is characteristically different for the Romans. Just as the Roman imperial
powers depicted within Matthew’s narrative do not frequently engage in opportunistic actions
designed to win the hearts and minds of their subject peoples, so they likewise do not engage in
verbal campaigns defaming their opponents or attempt, conversely, to garner the support of the
masses through the art of rhetorical persuasion. Those who have military means to enact the will
of the empire by the power of brute force have less need perhaps to “persuade” their subject
peoples through political argumentation. Instead, for the Roman imperial hierarchy, it is military
power itself that does the work of political persuasion. Thus when Herod, the client king over
Judea, is “disturbed” at the news he hears (ejt a r av cqh: 2:3a; TNIV), Matthew notes that Herod’s
unease is shared by “all Jerusalem with him” (2:3b). As the events of the unfolding narrative
suggest (2:13-18), it is sheer, and no doubt well-experienced, political instinct that infects the
people of Jerusalem with the moods of Herod himself. Thus they realize instinctively that when
Herod is “disturbed” (2:3; TNIV)—let alone “infuriated” (ejqum wvqh: 2:16a)—danger is never far
away (2:16b). The moods of Herod and what they portend, accordingly, are shown to be as
politically “persuasive” as the verbal rhetoric of the Jewish leaders.
Misspeaking the Truth: Public Lies and Political Deception. While the campaign rhetoric
of the political leaders in Matthew’s narrative may be strong and harsh, the clear implication of
the text is that this rhetoric, for the most part, reflects the honest opinions of its speakers. The
controversies between Jesus and the Jewish leaders, for example, are generally portrayed as
genuine controversies, in which the Jewish leaders actually believe the charges that they bring
against Jesus. Matthew calls the reader to believe, for example, that the Jewish leaders honestly
debate the “lawfulness” of Jesus’ actions and honestly challenge his “authority.” But political
rhetoric, in the heat of the political battle, often extends well beyond honest differences into the
realm of what is euphemistically called “misspeaking the truth” or in other words, public lies and
political deception. And on this front Matthew paints both the Roman imperial powers and the
Jewish leadership with the same brush.
Herod, the client king ruling Judea for the Romans, sets the stage for this type of cynical
political behavior at the very beginning of Matthew’s narrative. When the wise men are called to
appear before Herod (2:7), they apparently make the assumption that they are simply receiving a
royal welcome to Jerusalem and a private (cf. 2:7: “secret”/lavq r a/) audience with a king who is
vitally interested in the search that has brought them there. Matthew gives us no reason to
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believe that they are concerned about potential danger. They offer Herod the information he is
seeking (2:7) and unhesitatingly obey his command to go to Bethlehem (2:9). And it takes
nothing short of a divine dream-warning to deter them from returning to Herod with the
information that he seeks (2:12).
But Matthew’s readers are not fooled. Matthew has already clued the readers in to
Herod’s malicious intentions with his notice that Herod is “disturbed” at the news of Jesus’ birth.
So when Herod charges the wise men to “bring me word so that I may also go and pay him
homage” (2:8), Matthew’s readers know that danger is afoot. Surely Herod’s “homage” is more
threat than promise. But they are forced to look on helplessly for three interminable verses (2:9-
11), while the wise men cheerfully carry out Herod’s commands in blissful ignorance of Herod’s
evil intentions. Finally the dream-warning sends the wise men home “by another road” (2:12), a
clear signal to the wise men themselves that Herod has in fact deceived them And in the
following verses Matthew confirms for his readers what they have suspected all along: Herod is
intent on “seek[ing] the child’s life” (2:20) and “destroy[ing]” him (2:13). And in order to do so,
he brutally annihilates an entire population of young children in Bethlehem (2:16). Herod’s
words about “homage,” while they do not fool Matthew’s readers, are intentional, and initially
successful, political deception of the most cynical order for those to whom they are spoken.
And if Matthew’s narrative opens with an account of political deception by the Roman
imperial powers, it concludes with a depiction of just such deception carried out by the Jewish
chief priests and elders (28:11-15). Faced with a missing body (28:5-6) and an unsatisfactory
explanation by the soldiers set to guard the tomb (28:11), the chief priests and elders fabricate a
dangerously self-incriminating version of events for the soldiers to disseminate (28:13b): “His
disciples came by night and stole him away while we were asleep.” Then they bribe the soldiers
lavishly to pass on this fabrication (28:12-13a). And the Jewish leaders who could not find
“false testimony” against Jesus at his trial in spite of their most strenuous efforts (26:59-60) are
now successful in disseminating their own “false testimony” (28:15a), a story which in
Matthew’s words is “still told among the Jews to this day” (28:15b). Public deception is clearly
standard practice for the political leaders of Matthew’s narrative, whether Roman or Jewish.
Conspiracy to Destroy Political Enemies. One of the most notorious, most ubiquitous,
and, sadly, most successful strategies across the globe for gaining and/or retaining political
power lies in the age-old art of political conspiracy , i.e., “join[ing] in a secret agreement to do an
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unlawful or wrongful act or to use such means to accomplish a lawful end.”50 Most frequently
such conspiracies focus on the goal of destroying political enemies. Some conspiracies rise to
the level of confirmed fact. Mere mention of the word “Watergate” evokes memories of one of
the most notorious political conspiracies within American history, a conspiracy confirmed as fact
day after day in congressional hearings during the summer of 1973 by the riveting testimony of
such actual co-conspirators as John Dean, Counsel to then President Richard M. Nixon. Other
conspiracies exist as undying yet seemingly non-provable theories. Oliver Stone’s provocative
movie, JFK, raises just such indestructible conspiracy theories concerning the 1963 death of
President John Fitzgerald Kennedy. But, whether proven or unproven, conspiracies remain a
notorious constant in the realm of worldwide politics.
Matthew’s first-century narrative is awash with actual conspiracies, whether narrated to
us by Matthew’s omniscient implied author or confirmed for us by the words of the conspirators
in question. Matthew’s vocabulary offers us the technical terminology to denote conspiracy:
sumbo ule uvw (26:4) and s umbo uvli on la mba vn w (12:14; 22:15; 27:1, 7: 28:12).51 And even in
places where such technical terminology does not show up, Matthew uses alternative vocabulary
or adopts other means to depict the conspiratorial actions of the characters in question (2:1-23,
21:33-46, and 26:57-68).
The conspiracies of Matthew’s narrative focus on the characters of John the Baptist and
Jesus. In the case of John the Baptist it is Herodias who conspires together with her daughter to
bring about John’s death. For her part she “prompts” (p r o bi bavz w) her daughter to ask for the
head of John the Baptist delivered up on a platter (14:8). And her daughter in turn plays her part
in the conspiracy by verbalizing the request (14:8), receiving the head of John the Baptist on the
requested platter (14:11a), and handing the platter and head over to her mother (14:11b).
In the case of Jesus Matthew’s narrative portrays conspiracies on the part of his
opponents to defeat him in debate (22:15), to kill him outright,52 and to deny his resurrection
50 Webster’s Seventh New Collegiate Dictionary (Springfield, MA: G. & C. Merriam Company, Publishers, 1969): 178. 51 This correlated terminology is variously translated by the NRSV as “conspire” (12:14; 26:4), “plot” (22:15), “confer together” (27:1), and “devise a plan” (28:12) as it denotes conspiracies. But see 27:7, where the same vocabulary depicts the chief priests and the elders (27:3; cf. 27:6) “conferring together” in non-conspiratorial fashion over how to dispose of the coins that Judas has thrown onto the temple floor (27:5). 52 Thus 2:4, 7-8, 13, 16, 20; 12:14; 21:38; 26:4, 59; 27:1.
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(28:12-14). These conspiracies span the entire length of the narrative. And two of these
conspiracies, recounted in 2:1-23 and 28:11-15, create a framing device that forms a virtual but
penultimate “inclusio” around the narrative of Jesus’ life, death, and resurrection.53 Accordingly,
the entire story of Jesus, as Matthew tells it, has as its fundamental counterpoint the motif of
conspiratorial opposition to Jesus by the political leaders of the region, both Roman and Jewish.
The story is framed on the opening end by the quasi-conspiracy of Herod the king upon
hearing news of “the one who has been born king of the Jews” (2:1). Herod first engages the
unwitting collaboration of the Jewish chief priests and scribes of the people (2:4-6) on the one
hand and the Gentile “wise men” from the east (2:1-2, 7-8, 16) on the other in a secret and
deadly scheme of his own design to “seek the child’s life” (2:20) and “destroy” him (2:13).
Matthew’s narration underscores the conspiratorial character of Herod’s scheme with its vivid
and evocative vocabulary. Herod “calls together” the chief priests and scribes for a high-level
consultation.54 He arranges a “secret” meeting with the magi (lavq r a: 2:7). And he interrogates
his Jewish and Gentile informants closely55 regarding the exact place where (2:4-6) and the exact
time when (2:7, 16) this “king of the Jews” was born. Ultimately, Herod’s quasi-conspiracy
turns into a genuine conspiracy, as he sends his military henchmen out, fully aware of their task,
to “[kill] all the children in and around Bethlehem who [are] two years old or under” (2:16b).
Clearly the Roman imperial powers are masters of the art of political conspiracy.
But as the narrative progresses, it is Jesus’ Jewish opponents who mount repeated
conspiracies against him. When Jesus heals a man on the sabbath (12:9-14), they conspire to
“destroy him” (12:14). When Jesus defeats them in public debate, they conspire to “entrap him
in what he [says]” (22:15). Eventually they conspire to “arrest Jesus by stealth” (26:4), charge
him with “false testimony” (27:59), and “kill him” (26:4, 59; 27:1). And to carry out their plot
they hire an informant from among Jesus’ own disciples to “hand him over” to them (26:14-16).
The impetus for these conspiracies by the Jewish leaders is their intense political
“jealousy” of Jesus, as Pilate clearly recognizes (27:18). Jesus himself identifies the source of
this jealousy in the allegorical parable of the wicked tenants to whom the landowner sends his 53 Conspiracy against Jesus, as central as it is to the plot of Matthew’s story, is neither the first word (1:1-25) nor the last word of this story (28:16-20). And the threat to Jesus, Messiah (1:1, 16, 17, 18) and Son of God (28:19; cf. 3:17; 17:5), which is posed by such conspiracy, has accordingly only “penultimate” power. 54 Thus s u n a vgw: 2:4. Cf. 26:3-4, 57/59; 28:12, where s u n a vgw and the vocabulary of conspiracy coincide. 55 Thus p u n q a vn o m a i: 2:4; ajkri b ovw: 2:7, 16; cf. ejx eta vz w a jk ri bw'": 2:8.
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son (21:38, emphasis mine): “This is the heir; come, let us kill him and get his inheritance.”
Accordingly, the jealousy of the Jewish authorities and their conspiracies against him in
Matthew’s narrative reflect a fundamental power struggle with Jesus over leadership of the
Jewish people, framed here as the “inheritance” of the Jewish “vineyard” (i.e., Israel; cf. Isa. 5:1-
7). And initially the Jewish leaders appear to win this power struggle, when they succeed in
bringing about the death of Jesus (cf. 27:1-2, 15-26).
But when the dead body of Jesus disappears mysteriously from the tomb several days
later (28:1-11), the chief priests and elders are forced to engage in a final, desperate conspiracy
to counter the message of Jesus’ resurrection (28:12-15) and assure their continuing hold over
the hearts and minds of the Jewish people. The Jewish leaders pay a handsome bribe (28:12b: “a
large sum of money”) to the Roman soldiers to pass on the dangerously self-incriminating story
that Jesus’ disciples “came by night and stole him away while we were asleep” (28:13b). And
with their significant powers of “persuasion” (p e i vq w: 28:14b; cf. 27:20) the Jewish leaders
promise to keep the soldiers out of trouble, in case their open admission of dereliction of duty
reaches Pilate, the Roman governor (28:14a/c). This conspiracy is highly effective and
enormously durable in the Jewish community. As Matthew acknowledges, the story is still being
told “among the Jews” in his own day (28:15). Along with their Roman counterparts the Jewish
leaders of Matthew’s narrative are clearly well skilled at the art of political conspiracy.
Subversion of Justice: Judicial Systems Run Amok. There is likely no more iconic image
of the misuse of political power than that of a show trial, where the jury is stacked against the
defendant, the guilty verdict determined in advance, or the outcome of the trial dictated by the
emotions of a lynch mob. Images of such cynical travesties of justice span the centuries and
circle the globe with grim and distressing regularity, leaving few nations or judicial systems
innocent and untouched. One such vivid image comes to us from Matthew’s account of Jesus’
arrest and trials before Jewish (26:3-5, 14-16, 47-66; 27:1-2) and Roman (27:11-26) courts. And
while Matthew portrays the Jewish leaders and the Roman governor as conducting their judicial
affairs in significantly different fashion, he nevertheless lays unmistakable blame on both Jewish
and Roman leaders for the miscarriage of justice over which they each in turn preside.
The Jewish miscarriage of justice begins days before Jesus’ trial with the conspiracy of
the chief priests and the elders “to arrest Jesus by stealth and kill him” (26:4). Both the language
of “stealth” and the stated intention to “kill” Jesus offer vivid evidence in advance that there will
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be no legitimate judicial proceedings when Jesus is arrested. Instead, the outcome of the trial has
already been determined; and “stealth” is accordingly a necessary strategy to conceal the blatant
illegitimacy of the proceedings that lie ahead. The picture grows still darker when Judas Iscariot
presents himself to the chief priests and offers his services to “hand Jesus over” (DJW) to them
for a fee (26:14-16). The conspiracy is now full-fledged. And the “hit man” has now been hired.
The arrest of Jesus takes place both with the intended “stealth” but likewise with the
trappings of enormous physical force. Judas seeks out Jesus at nighttime in Gethsemane (26:36),
so the arrest can take place in a dark and secluded garden, well away from the light of day and
the crowded city streets of Jerusalem. But Judas Iscariot brings along with him “a large crowd
with swords and clubs from the chief priests and the elders of the people” (26:47b). And Jesus
himself challenges the arrest posse both on the location of the arrest (26:55b: “Day after day I sat
in the temple teaching, and you did not arrest me”) and on the excessive force employed (26:55a:
“Have you come out with swords and clubs to arrest me as though I were a bandit?”). With this
depiction of Jesus’ arrest Matthew’s narrative imagery clearly suggests the fundamental
illegitimacy of the proceedings at hand.56
Nor do things improve when Jesus is brought before Caiaphas, the Jewish high priest, and
the assembled Jewish leaders (26:57). Here there is neither interest in nor attempt at a genuine
legal proceeding with the goal of uncovering the truth of the matter. To the contrary the chief
priests and the “whole council” are engaged in a massive and energetic search for “false
testimony against Jesus” toward the express goal “that they might put him to death” (26:59).
Their failure to obtain “false testimony” apparently reflects their inability to find corroborating
stories among the “many false witnesses” (26:60) who take the stand against Jesus.57
When Jesus refuses to respond to the apparently true charge finally brought against him
by two witnesses (26:60c-63a),58 the high priest adopts an alternative strategy, putting Jesus
under oath to declare whether he is “the Messiah, the Son of God” (26:63b). The obvious ploy
56 Within the scope of this paper I work strictly with the narrative force of Matthew’s story. I make no attempt here to resolve any of the urgent historical questions surrounding the actual trial(s) of Jesus. 57 Cf. Dt. 19:15, where the Jewish law stipulates that “[Only] on the evidence of two or three witnesses shall a charge be sustained.” 58 In pointed distinction to his Markan source which identifies the “temple destruction” charge against Jesus as “false” (14:57-58), Matthew carefully distinguishes the “many false witnesses” (26:60b) and the “two who came forward” (26:60c) and maintains that the Jewish leaders do not in fact find the “false testimony” that they are seeking (26:59a/60a).
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here, as confirmed by the unfolding events of the narrative, is to establish the capital charge of
“blasphemy” against Jesus.59 And Jesus’ tacit affirmation (26:64a: “You have said so.”) and the
accompanying prediction about the coming Son of Man (26:64b) clearly provide Caiaphas with
the ammunition he needs to pronounce the charge of “blasphemy” against Jesus (26:65) and to
call forth the formal verdict from the assembled council (26:66b): “He deserves death.” Here
Matthew’s irony is biting. While the Jewish leaders are unable to convict Jesus on the “false
testimony” that they are intentionally seeking (26:59-60), they ultimately achieve their goal by
pronouncing a false verdict of which they are completely unaware. As Matthew’s readers know
well, Jesus is indeed “the Messiah, the Son of God” (3:17; 17:5). Thus the verdict of the Jewish
council is false, not because “blasphemy” itself is not a capital crime but rather because Jesus is
indeed the Messiah and Son of God and thus his witness to this effect is not blasphemy. As a
result the Jewish leaders preside over a judicial travesty both knowingly and unknowingly. And
Matthew holds them accountable on both fronts.
Nor is this the end of their culpability. In the morning, after the late night trial, the
Jewish leaders consummate their conspiracy by “[binding] Jesus, [leading] him away, and
[handing] him over to Pilate the governor” (27:1-2). With this act the Jewish leaders join Judas
in the culpability for “handing over” an “innocent” man to certain death (27:3-4a); and they also
disregard in cavalier fashion Judas’ subsequent witness to the “innocence” of Jesus: “What is
that to us? See to it yourself” (27:4b). Their final act in this judicial travesty is to stack the jury
of public opinion against Jesus and “persuade” (27:20) the crowds gathered before Pilate to call
for the release of Barabbas, a “notorious prisoner” (27:16, 17a, 20a, 21), and demand the death
of Jesus by crucifixion (27:20b, 22-23). Matthew’s damning account of the judicial culpability
of the Jewish leaders concludes with the assessment of Pilate that they have acted not out of
genuine legal concerns but rather out of a politically-motivated “jealousy” (f q ovn o ": 27:18).60
But in spite of his political astuteness Pilate fares no better than the Jewish leaders in
Matthew’s narrative depiction. While Matthew charges the Jewish leaders with politically-
motivated “jealousy” and a blatant attempt to gain advantage over their opponent by “false” 59 Thus Lev. 24:16a/b: “One who blasphemes the name of the LORD shall be put to death; the whole congregation shall stone the blasphemer.” The historical question of whether Jesus’ declaration would in fact have constituted “blasphemy” according to Jewish law if it were not true is a moot point for Matthew’s narrative, which simply offers the verdict of Caiaphas and the council as the legal status of the question. 60 Cf. 21:38, where apparent jealousy of the “heir” (oJ kl hrovn o m o ") and “his inheritance” (thjn kl hron o m i va n a u jt ou ') is the self-identified motivation for the murder of the landowner’s son.
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means, Matthew accuses Pilate of the equally damning charge of political expedience.61 And
here Pilate’s knowledge and his astuteness serve only to heighten his culpability in Matthew’s
assessment. Pilate has all the information, the political instinct, and the inherent authority that he
needs to conduct an honest and fair judicial proceeding. He knows the innocence of the
defendant (27:19, 23). He understands the political motivation of the plaintiffs (27:18). And he
clearly has the authority as Roman governor to “release” defendants when the circumstances
warrant (27:15, 17, 21; cf. 27:26). But in spite of all these qualifications Pilate presides over a
miscarriage of justice just as egregious and just as culpable as that of the Jewish leaders.
His first false move is to hand his own judicial authority over to the Passover crowds in
line with his annual custom “to release a prisoner for the crowd, anyone whom they [want]”
(27:15; emphasis mine). Pilate then compounds his first error by overriding his own native
instinct about the truth of the matter (27:18), neglecting the exculpatory evidence brought to his
attention (27:19), and responding instead in expedient fashion out of his political fear of the
crowds and the “riot” that they instigate in front of him (27:24a). Pilate then brings his
miscarriage of justice to a vivid and bitterly ironic conclusion as he “washes his hands before the
crowd” (27:24a),62 claims his own “innocence” instead of the “innocence” of his defendant
(27:24b),63 releases a “notorious prisoner” to a shouting mob (27:26a cf. 27:16), and “hands
[Jesus] over to be crucified” (27:26c). Just as Judas (26:15, 16, 48) and the Jewish leaders (27:2)
have each done in their turn, Pilate now assumes the final culpability for “handing Jesus over” to
death. And Matthew leaves his readers with no doubt that the political leaders of Jesus’ day,
both Jewish and Roman, are masters at the art of subverting justice on the judicial level.
The Politics of Violence: Ultimate Political Sanctions. The ultimate and most egregious
use of political power within any given society is reflected in those acts of emotional and
physical violence by which political leaders seek first to demoralize and then to destroy their
political adversaries in order to secure their own political power. Images and stories of such
politically-motivated violence by powerbrokers of our world fill our newspapers, our airwaves,
and our television screens regularly. Arrest and imprisonment of political adversaries, mockery
and torture of political prisoners, kidnappings, disappearances, extra-judicial killings,
61 See the discussion above on political expedience. 62 Cf. Dt. 21:6-7; Pss. 26:6; 73:13. 63 Thus a jq w'/ov" ei jm i: 27:24; cf. a i {m a a jq w'/on: 27:4.
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assassinations, and the legalized imposition of capital punishment are, with alarming frequency,
the standard “modus operandi” of those who wield political power in our 21st-century world.
The situation is no different in the world of Matthew’s narrative. The use of violence as
an ultimate political sanction is clearly an unquestioned assumption for the political leaders of
Matthew’s narrative, both Roman and Jewish. And such violence begins at very least with the
arrest of prisoners. Within Matthew’s narrative prisoners are “arrested,”64 “seized,”65 “dragged”
before authorities,66 “led away,”67 and “handed over” 68 to prison,69 trial, and execution. Those
who arrest prisoners “lay hands on” them,70 “bind” them,71 and use “swords and clubs” to carry
out their arrests.72
Once arrested, prisoners then encounter both the emotional violence of mockery and the
physical violence of torture. Those who hold prisoners in their power “mock” them both
verbally73 and in elaborately staged rituals intended to ridicule their victims (27:27-31). The
vivid and detailed account of Jesus’ “royal” mockery by an entire cohort of Pilate’s soldiers—
with the scarlet robe, the crown of thorns, the reed scepter, the genuflection, and the acclamation,
“Hail, King of the Jews!”—appears to reflect the common means by which Roman soldiers
entertain themselves at their prisoners’ expense in the course of their military service for the
governor. And the verbal taunts hurled at Jesus by those in authority, whether Jewish (26:68;
27:42-43) or Roman (27:29c), clearly reflect a culture in which verbal abuse of prisoners by
those in authority is viewed by those same authorities as standard and acceptable practice.
64 Thus s u l l a m ba vn w: 26:55. 65 Thus l a m ba vn w: 21:35, 39; kra tevw: 14:3; 21:46; 22:6; 26:4, 48, 50, 55, 57. 66 Thus a [gw: 10:18. 67 Thus a jp a vgw: 26:57; 27:2, 31. 68 Thus p a ra di v dwm i: 4:12; 10:17, 19; 17:22; 20:18, 19; 24:9; 26:2, 15, 16, 21, 23, 24, 25, 45, 46, 48; 27:2, 4, 26. 69 Thus des m w thvri on: 11:2; fu la khv: 14:3, 10. 70 Thus ejp i ba vl l w ta j" c ei 'ra ": 26:50. 71 Thus dev w: 14:3; 27:2. 72 Thus m a c a i rw'n ka i j x u vl wn: 26:47, 55. 73 Thus ejm p a i vz w: 20:19; 27:29, 31, 41.
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Beyond the level of verbal abuse a prisoner may suffer the public indignity of being
“stripped” of his clothing (ejk duvw: 27:28, 31), dressed up for mockery (27:28-29), and then re-
clothed with his own garments (ejn duvw: 27:31). And the physical abuse and “mistreatment” 74 that
prisoners endure extend from acts of public ridicule to acts of brutal torture. Prisoners are “spit
on” in what is no doubt universally understood to be an act of contempt and shaming .75 They are
“slapped”76 and “struck”77 with the hands or with a rod. They are “beaten” with a rod78 or
“flogged” with a whip,79 whether in Jewish synagogues (10:17; 23:34) or in Roman courtyards
(cf. 20:19). And, surely most brutal of all, they are “flogged” with the Roman flagellum,80 an
instrument of torture that contains bits of lead and bone intended specifically to increase the pain
and the physical injuries of the victims.
But torture is merely the prelude to the final act of violence. Prisoners who have been
formally condemned to death (20:18; 26:66) or otherwise destined to die are then “killed” 81 in a
manner consistent with the respective practices of the political powers in question. The Jewish
leaders, when they assume the authority to carry out their own death sentences, stone their
victims to death,82 a practice legislated in the Torah.83 Herod the tetrarch, acting on the wishes
of his consort, Herodias, decapitates John the Baptist.84 And the Romans, for their part, crucify
political insurgents and common criminals.85
74 Cf. u Jbri vz w: 22:6. 75 Thus ejm p tu v w: 26:67; 27:30. 76 Thus rJa p i vz w: 26:67. 77 Thus ko l a fi vz w: 26:67; p a i vw: 26:68; tuvp tw: 27:30. 78 Thus dev rw: 21:35. 79 Thus m a s ti govw: 10:17; 20:19; 23:34. 80 Thus fra g el l ovw: 27:26. 81 Thus q a n a tovw: 26:59; 27:1; ajp ovl l u m i: 27:2; ajp o kt ei vn w: 10:18; 14:5; 16:21; 17:23; 23:34, 37; 24:9; 26:4; cf. 21:35, 38, 39; 22:6. 82 Thus l i q o bo l evw: 21:35; 23:37. Cf. John 8:5, the account of the woman taken in adultery, and Acts 7:58-59, the account of the stoning of Stephen by a Jewish crowd in Jerusalem. 83 Thus, for example, Lev. 20:2; 24:14; Dt. 13:10. 84 Thus a jp o k efa l i vz w: 14:10. Cf. the references to John’s “head” (kefa l hv) in 14:8, 11.
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And in cases where there are no apparent judicial proceedings at all, Matthew’s
narrative depicts politically-motivated assassinations or “search and destroy” missions.
At the behest of Herod the king countless children are “killed” (ajn a i revw) en masse in a
slaughter constituting collective punishment for the very young of Bethlehem (2:16c):
“And [Herod] sent and killed all the children in and around Bethlehem who were two
years old or under . . . .” Jesus, for his part, speaks of a Jewish prophet from an earlier
era (“Zechariah, son of Barachiah”), who is “murdered” (f wn euvw) in the Jerusalem
temple “between the sanctuary and the altar” (23:35; cf. 23:31), an apparent allusion to
the politically-motivated stoning death of “Zechariah, son of the priest Jehoida” at the
command of King Joash, but apparently without a formal judicial hearing, due to the
king’s displeasure at Zechariah’s unpatriotic prophecy against the people of Judah and
Jerusalem (2 Chr. 24:20-22). Elsewhere Jesus tells an allegorical parable of a
landowner’s servants and son who are “stoned” to death (li q o bo levw: 21:35) or “killed”
(21:35, 38, 39) by the vineyard tenants to whom they are sent to collect the produce of
the vineyard. And in a similar vein Jesus likewise depicts servants who are “killed”
(ajp o k t ei vn w: 22:6) or “murdered” (cf. t ou; " f on ei '": 22:7) by those whom they are sent
to invite to the wedding banquet for the king’s son.
In general terms the politically powerful within Matthew’s narrative “persecute” their
political opponents,86 while “the violent take the [kingdom of heaven] by force” (11:12).87 For
their part the victims of the politically powerful “suffer”/“suffer violence” at the hands of the
power brokers.88 And the “blood” of “prophets,”89 “righteous” ones,90 and “innocent” victims91
is shed by those who have the political will and power to do so. In speaking of the politically-
motivated execution of John the Baptist at the hands of Herod the tetrarch, Jesus concludes in
85 Thus s ta u rovw: 20:19; 23:34; 26:2; 27:22, 23, 26, 31, 35, 38; 28:5; s us ta u rovw: 27:44; oJ s ta u rov": 10:38; 16:24; 27:32, 40, 42. 86 Thus di wv kw: 5:10, 11, 12; 10:23; 23:34. 87 Thus ka i ; bi a vs ta i a J rp a vz ou s i n a u jthvn. 88 Thus p a vs c w: 16:21; 17:12; bi a vz o m a i: 11:12. 89 Thus tw'/ a i {m a ti tw'n p rof h tw'n: 23:30. 90 Thus p a 'n a i {m a di v ka i on / tou ' a i {m a to " tou ' #A b el tou ' di k a i vou: 23:35. 91 Thus a i {m a a q jw'/on: 27:4; cf. 27:6, 24, 25.
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blunt and uncompromising language: “I tell you that Elijah has already come, and they did not
recognize him, but they did to him whatever they pleased” (17:12; emphasis mine). In
Matthew’s view, there are no identifiable limits to the violence and brutality that the political
leaders of his narrative exercise in order to retain their political power.
Failed Leadership: A Matthean Assessment. Throughout his narrative Matthew passes
unambiguous judgment on the political leaders in question, charging both Roman and Jewish
power brokers with reprehensible use of political power. The evidence is straightforward.
Jesus himself assesses the Roman use of political power in a few brief but pointed words
(20:25): “You know that the rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them [k at a kur i euvous i n aujt w'n],
and their great ones are tyrants over them [k at exous i avz ous i n aujt w'n].” To further reinforce this
negative judgment, Jesus adds, “It will not be so among you” (20:26a); and he then delineates a
radically new approach to being “great” (20:26b-28).
But Jesus saves most of his harsh words for the political leaders of the Jewish
community. On the one hand he depicts the Jewish leaders as the “tenants” to whom God the
“landowner” has leased the “vineyard” of Israel (21:33); and he identifies the Jewish leaders as
those who “sit on the seat of Moses” (23:2). But Jesus grants authority to the Jewish leaders
with one hand only to take it back with the other. The “tenants,” as the Jewish leaders are forced
to acknowledge in their own words,92 ultimately prove themselves to be “wretches” (k a k ouv")
who will face a “miserable death” (k a k w'" ajp o l evs ei) and in the process forfeit the “vineyard” to
others (21:41). And those who “sit on the seat of Moses” (23:2) and speak words which are to be
heeded (23:3a: “So do whatever they teach you and follow it”) nevertheless prove themselves to
be “hypocrites”93 who “do not practice what they teach” (23:3c) and whose lifestyle Jesus
accordingly warns his disciples not to emulate (23:3b: “But do not do as they do”).
Matthew, for his part, charges the Jewish leaders with lacking the “authority” (ejxo us i va)
that characterizes Jesus’ teaching ministry (7:29). And he portrays them as failing repeatedly to
lead the people under their charge. Not only do the scribes and Pharisees fail the “mercy” test to
which Jesus submits their legal judgments (e{l eo ": 9:13; 12:7; 23:23). But the chief priests and
elders likewise fail to exercise their fundamental intermediary role between the people and God
92 In a remarkable verbal maneuver the Matthean Jesus obliges the Jewish leaders to pronounce a verdict on themselves as he asks them about the ultimate fate of the “tenants” in the story he has just recounted to them. Cf. Mk. 12:1-9, where Jesus poses the question rhetorically and answers it himself. 93 Thus u Jp o kri ta i v: 6:2, 5, 16; 7:5, 15:7; 16:3; 22:18; 23:13, 14, 15, 23, 25, 27, 29.
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when Judas comes to them confessing that he has “sinned” (27:3-4a). Instead of caring for Judas
in their priestly capacity, they throw his “sin” back into his face with the caustic words, “What is
that to us? See to it yourself” (27:3b). Similarly, while the “God-forsaken” Jesus hangs dying
on a Roman cross (cf. 27:46), the chief priests, scribes, and elders make no intermediary effort to
plead with God on Jesus’ behalf.94 Instead they exhibit a cavalier disregard for human suffering,
taunting Jesus to “save himself” (27:42a; cf. 27:40a) and “come down from the cross” (27:42b;
cf. 27:40a). And they likewise exhibit a cynical distrust of God himself, taunting God in similar
fashion to “deliver” Jesus “if he wants to” (27:43b).
Clearly the Jewish leaders of Matthew’s narrative are not fulfilling the leadership role to
which they have been called as “shepherds of Israel” (cf. Ezek. 34:1-10). And Jesus accordingly
“[has] compassion” on the Jewish crowds (cf. Ezek. 34:11-16), because he views them as
“harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd” (9:36; emphasis mine).
II. “When Herod Died”: Matthew’s Assessment of the Effectiveness of Political Power
As illustrated above, Matthew’s Gospel is replete with vivid depictions of the exercise of
political power as carried out by Jewish and Roman political leaders in the world of Matthew’s
narrative. Along with these depictions, as also noted above, comes Matthew’s consistently
negative assessment of the ethical character of such political initiatives through the multi-faceted
rhetoric of his storytelling. But there is another crucial means by which to evaluate the exercise
of political power within Matthew’s narrative on its own terms, namely the simple question of
effectiveness. The manifest purpose for exercising political power is to achieve corresponding
political goals, whether stated or unstated. Accordingly a crucial signal of Matthew’s
perspectives on the exercise of political power lies in the narrative depiction of the effectiveness
or ineffectiveness of political initiatives to achieve their intended goals.
On this front Matthew exhibits a strong penchant for the ironic, as he paints political
caricatures of the Jewish and Roman leaders, portrays the ineffectiveness of their political
initiatives, and depicts their frequent failures to achieve the political goals they set out to
accomplish. While political power can without question effect crucial results ranging from
public influence on or persuasion of the masses (2:3; 27:20) to blatant miscarriage of justice
94 See, for example, Ex. 33:1-6/12-23, where Moses pleads successfully with the LORD not to abandon God’s people, as God has threatened (“I will not go up among you”: v. 3b), but instead to “go with [them]” (v. 16a) to the land to which they are going. Cf. also Num. 14:10b-25; 16:41-50; 21:4-9, where Moses likewise intercedes successfully with God on behalf of the people.
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(26:59; 27:15-26) and the resulting execution of the “righteous” or “innocent” (23:35; 27:3-4, 19,
23; cf. 2:16), the narrative rhetoric of Matthew’s Gospel clearly and persistently depicts the
limits of political power to achieve the ultimate goals of the political operatives in question. A
review of the evidence will serve to establish Matthew’s ironic and negative perspectives on the
exercise of political power by the Jewish and Roman leaders within his narrative.
Lavish Lifestyle. For Herod the tetrarch (14:1-12) lavish lifestyle appears on the surface
to be its own reward. The life of partying, with a group of reclining guests (14:9; cf. 14:6), fine
entertainment (14:6), and an extravagant and highly public award ceremony (14:7), is clearly a
luxury for the wealthy and powerful to enjoy. But it is this same luxurious lifestyle that reveals
Herod as a fundamentally weak character, a man forced into expedient actions (14:9-11) due to
fear of his consort Herodias (14:3, 4, 6, 8, 11), her daughter (14:6, 7, 8, 9, 11), and the very
guests he has invited to his dinner. And ironically, it is precisely Herod’s extravagant oath, the
oath of a “powerful” man, which reveals instead his fundamental weakness.
Power of Command. The story of Herod the king (2:1-23) reveals a comparable truth.
Herod wields a power of command that brings people into his presence (2:4, 7), sends them out
(2:8, 16), and spells out death and destruction for many innocent victims (2:16). But with all his
power of command Herod cannot save himself from being outmaneuvered and overpowered by
the “angel of the Lord,” who, unbeknownst to Herod, persistently foils his every effort to “seek
the child’s life” (2:20) in order to “destroy” him (2:13). At every point where the child’s life is
threatened, the angel of the Lord intervenes through the medium of “dreams” to rescue the child
from the threat at hand (2:12, 13, 22; cf. 2:19). And in the end Herod not only proves himself
incapable of achieving his key political goal, i.e., to “destroy” the child (cf. 2:19-23); but in a
deeply ironic turn of events Herod himself “dies” instead of the child he has been seeking to
“destroy” (2:19, 20). Herod’s power of command proves useless in furthering his political aims.
Public Relations Initiatives. The Jewish leaders, who take all their actions in order to
“show” others their piety (6:16a) and to be “seen” (6:5a) and “praised” (6:2a) for their “righteous
deeds” (6:1: DJW), ultimately find their actions no more effective than those of Herod the king
(2:1-23) and Herod the tetrarch (14:1-12). While they clearly receive the momentary public
praise and approval that they are seeking (“Truly, I tell you, they have received their reward”:
6:2b, 5b, 16b), they do not receive the ultimate approbation of the Jewish crowds. Instead the
crowds recognize that Jesus has an “authority” (ej xous i va) that the Jewish “scribes” do not have
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(7:29; 9:8); and they are “astounded” by Jesus’ teaching (ejk p lh vs s w: 7:28; 22:33) and “amazed”
by his healing ministry (q aumavz w: 9:33; 15:31; cf. f o bevo ma i: 9:8; ejxi vst h mi: 12:23).
Consequently large Jewish crowds “follow” Jesus around the Galilean countryside;95 and they
swarm around Jesus as he enters Jerusalem and heals and teaches in the temple.96 They “glorify
God” on Jesus’ account (do xavz w: 9:8). They acclaim Jesus’ deeds as unique in Israel: “Never
has anything like this been seen in Israel” (9:33). They hail Jesus as the “Son of David” and “the
one who comes in the name of the Lord” (21:9). And they proclaim him as “the prophet Jesus
from Nazareth in Galilee (21:11; cf. 21:46). Clearly, in spite of all their best efforts at public
relations, the Jewish leadership is totally ineffective for much of Matthew’s narrative at winning
over the hearts and minds of the Jewish crowds, while their opponent Jesus, to the contrary, is
highly popular among the people.
Nor do Pilate’s efforts at winning over Jewish hearts and minds prove any more effective.
Instead the public relations initiative that Pilate instigates in order to win the approval of the
Jewish crowds at Passover (27:15) leads only to a noisy debate with the crowds (27:20-23) and
the outbreak of a politically dangerous “riot” (27:24). Thus, as both Jewish and Roman leaders
discover to their dismay, first-century “photo-ops” prove largely ineffective vis-à-vis the crowds.
Political Expedience. If the lavish lifestyle of the politically powerful highlights (on the
surface at least) the apparent success of their political endeavors, political expedience by contrast
points to the undeniable failure of their political efforts. The very concept of “political
expedience” implies by definition that the political operatives in question are forced by political
exigencies beyond their control to do that which they would otherwise not do. Herod the tetrarch
is “grieved” at the request of Herodias’ daughter (14:9a), but sees no political alternative to
executing John the Baptist (14:9b). The chief priests and the elders of the people, for their part,
are clearly seeking to trap Jesus when they accost him with their question about his “authority”
(21:23). But instead they themselves are effectively trapped (“We do not know”: 21:27) by
Jesus’ counter question, which they find too politically dangerous to answer in definitive terms
one way (21:25) or the other (21:26). In similar fashion the chief priests and the Pharisees find
95 Thus a jko l ou q ev w: 4:25; 8:1, 12:15; 14:13; 19:2; 20:29. Cf. 5:1; 8:18; 9:36; 14:14, where Jesus “sees” the crowds who have gathered around him. 96 Thus 21:9, where crowds likewise “go ahead” of Jesus (p ro a vgw) and “follow” him (a j ko l o u q evw) on his entry into Jerusalem. See also 21:14-15, 46; 23:1.
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themselves incapable of “arresting” Jesus when he tells a story against them, due to their political
fear of the Jewish crowds (21:45-46). And Pilate, for his part, finds himself forced by the
political danger of “rioting” crowds (27:24) to execute a prisoner whom he knows to be innocent
(27:19a, 23a) and whom he knows has been brought to trial for spurious reasons (27:18).
Whether these political leaders are ultimately effective in staving off the “sudden political
death” that they fear is a question that Matthew answers variously or not at all. Herod the
tetrarch disappears from the narrative abruptly after 14:1-12, with no further indication of his
political success or failure. The Jewish leaders in Jerusalem ultimately succeed in winning over
the Jewish crowd to their viewpoint (27:20-23, 25). Pilate, for his part, staves off a political
“riot” by a symbolic “handwashing” (27:24-25), only to discover that the “Jesus case” refuses to
disappear from his docket (27:62-66). And Pilate, the Roman governor, may ultimately find
himself manipulated by his Jewish subjects and “persuaded” (28:14, DJW: read “bribed”) into
excusing a serious failure on the job by a military guard under his control. As Matthew portrays
it, political expedience is clear evidence of political failure both going and (frequently) coming.
Campaign Rhetoric. As noted above, the Jewish leaders depicted throughout Matthew’s
narrative find that their public relations initiatives are not effective in winning the hearts and
minds of the Jewish people. They likewise make the same discovery with regard to their
relentless campaign rhetoric against Jesus. Throughout Matthew’s narrative the Jewish leaders
trail Jesus doggedly, raising countless questions and objections and denouncing Jesus publicly
whenever possible.97 But no matter how often they speak or how loudly they denounce Jesus,
they fail consistently in their efforts to defeat Jesus in public debate. For every challenge or
question that they bring forward and for every “trap” that they set, Jesus responds with words
that they can neither answer nor refute.98 And Jesus’ word is invariably the last word spoken,
with the exception of conspiratorial threats muttered by the Jewish leaders among themselves (cf.
9:14; 21:45-46). Not once does Matthew offer the Jewish leaders the opportunity to get the last
word in debate with Jesus. And Jesus’ last direct word to them, a scriptural conundrum (22:41-
45), is a question that silences them completely (22:46): “No one was able to give him an
answer, nor from that day did anyone dare to ask him any more questions.” If the Jewish leaders
97 Thus 9:2-8, 10-13; 12:1-8, 9-14, 22-37, 38-45; 15:1-9; 16:1-4; 19:3-9; 21:14-16, 23-27; 22:15-22, 23-33, 34-40; cf. 22:41-46. 98 Cf. the texts listed above in footnote 103 to identify the questions posed and the answers given. There is no room in a paper of this length to spell out the specifics of this wide ranging debate.
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are, as it appears, waging a political campaign against Jesus, this campaign is, until very late in
the narrative (27:20), spectacularly ineffective in achieving positive results.
Public Lies and Political Deception. As Matthew indicates, both Roman imperial powers
(2:8 cf. 2:16) and Jewish leaders (28:12-15 cf. 28:11) engage in the dissemination of public lies.
And their efforts are likewise depicted as partially or wholly successful. Herod the king
succeeds, without apparent difficulty, in persuading the wise men to “set out for Bethlehem”
(2:9) on his behest under what the reader surmises to be false premises, Herod’s supposed
interest in “paying [the child] homage” (2:8). And the Roman guard, in collaboration with the
Jewish chief priests and elders, disseminate a false story about the empty tomb of Jesus (28:12-
15a) which maintains currency within the Jewish community up until Matthew’s own day
(28:15b). Clearly one can deceive all of the people (i.e., the wise men) some of the time or some
of the people (i.e., “the Jews”) all of the time.
But even here Matthew points in ironic fashion to the ultimate ineffectiveness of political
deception as a strategy for political success. Herod the king, who thinks that he has successfully
deceived the wise men into aiding him in his nefarious scheme to “destroy” the child” (2:8 cf.
2:13), has no notion that the “angel of the Lord” is about to undo his secretive efforts and
communicate the ugly truth (2:13; cf. 2:12). Herod’s efforts at deception are ultimately
ineffective due to divine intervention of which Herod knows nothing. In Matthew’s perspective
God wills the truth to become public; and Herod can do nothing to prevent that from happening.
Matthew works differently, however, with the false message concerning Jesus’ empty
tomb (28:11-15). Here it is the worldwide proclamation of Jesus’ own disciples (28:19-20) that
puts the deceptive “story told among the Jews” (28:15b) in cosmic perspective and undercuts the
ultimate impact of this blatant attempt at public deception. While the Jewish leaders’ fabrication
concerning the body of Jesus is still being passed on as truth in Matthew’s own day, this false
story is reaching “the Jews” alone (28:15b). By contrast the true message of the Risen Jesus is
making its way to “all the nations” including the Jews99 and creating a worldwide fellowship of
disciples of Jesus,100 of whom Matthew’s own church is merely one small expression. In the
99 The climactic location of this saying of the Risen Jesus within the Gospel, the cosmic authority of the Risen Jesus, and the inclusively phrased formulation p a vn ta ta ; e [q n h point to Matthew’s intention to make an all-inclusive statement here. Cf. 24:9, 14. 100 Cf. 24:14: “And this good news of the kingdom will be proclaimed throughout the world [ejn o{l h/ th'/ o i jk ou m evn h] to all the nations [p a 's i n to i '" e[q n e s i n].”
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narrative rhetoric of Matthew’s Gospel public lies and political deception have no ultimate
recourse against the will and the power of God to make known the truth.
Conspiracy to Destroy Political Enemies. Matthew’s narrative leaves no room for doubt
concerning the significant power of conspiracies aimed at destroying political enemies. As
becomes apparent throughout Matthew’s story, such conspiracies can foment enormous evil in
the world. Herod, who is conspiring against the one child that he fears (2:13), carries out a brutal
massacre in Bethlehem (2:16) that leaves countless mothers bereft of their young children (2:17-
18). John the Baptist loses his head due to the successful conspiracy of Herodias, the consort of
Herod the tetrarch (14:8). The “tenants” to whom Jesus’ allegorical “landowner” has “leased”
his “vineyard” succeed in executing the brutal murder (21:39) that they have conspired to carry
out (21:38). And the Jewish leaders are likewise successful in procuring the death of Jesus
(27:24-26) by means of an entire web of conspiracies (12:14; 21:46; 26:14-16; 27:1-2, 20).
But within Matthew’s narrative the political strategy of conspiracy to destroy one’s
enemies ultimately proves itself no more effective than that of public lies and political deception.
Matthew’s narrative rhetoric more often than not mocks those who conspire to do evil and
depicts the ultimate ineffectiveness of their efforts. Herod the king, who seeks to “destroy” the
child (2:13; cf. 2:20) is incapable not only of achieving his own goal (2:21-23) but also of saving
his own life (2:19). The Jewish leaders who conspire to “entrap” Jesus in his words (22:15) find
themselves totally incapable of defeating Jesus in public debate (cf. 22:46).101 The “tenants” of
Jesus’ parable, who conspire to “get the inheritance” of the vineyard by “killing the heir” (21:38-
39), discover instead that they themselves are about to face a “miserable death” (21:41a) and lose
their stake in the vineyard altogether (21:41b). The Jewish leaders in Jerusalem, for their part,
clearly intend their conspiracy against Jesus to be cloaked in secrecy: “And they conspired to
arrest Jesus by stealth and kill him” (26:4; emphasis mine). But in fact Jesus has long known
and spoken of their evil intentions (16:21; 17:22-23; 20:18-19). And the “stealthy” plans that the
Jewish leaders lay for arresting Jesus and killing him (26:3-5) are, unbeknownst to the Jewish
leaders themselves, no secret at all, since Jesus has just announced them, for the fourth and last
time, to his disciples (26:1-2). And the conspiracy of the Jewish leaders to cover up the news of
Jesus’ resurrection maintains currency “among the Jews” alone (28:15b), while Jesus’ disciples
101 See the discussion above concerning campaign rhetoric.
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carry word of the Risen Jesus to “all nations” (28:19). Conspiracy, in Matthew’s estimation, is
ultimately a political strategy of dubious effectiveness.
Subversion of Justice. In Matthew’s narrative both Jewish and Roman political leaders
clearly engage in subversion of justice, whether by prior conspiracy (26:3-5) or due to political
expedience (27:24-26). And there can be no doubt about the effectiveness of the Jewish and
Roman powers in achieving such subversion of justice, whether or not this is their stated goal.
The Jewish leaders “conspire” against Jesus in advance (26:3-5, 14-16; cf. 27:1-2), arrest him by
“stealth” (26:4, 55), seek “false testimony” against him at trial (26:59), and condemn Jesus on a
charge of “blasphemy” which they fail to recognize as false (26:65-66). Thus the Jewish leaders
clearly succeed in subverting justice as they put Jesus on trial. Pilate, in turn, subverts justice by
first handing over his judicial authority to the Jewish crowd (27:15-18) and then responding in
politically expedient fashion when he is backed into a corner by the “riot” that breaks out (27:24-
26 cf. 27:20-23). In Matthew’s view both the Jewish leaders and Pilate are equally effective in
subverting the respective judicial systems over which they preside.
At the same time, however, Jesus himself makes it clear in advance that both Jewish and
Roman leaders are able to carry out their subversion of justice precisely because their actions,
completely unbeknownst to them, fulfill a divine mandate for the life of Jesus in which he “must
(dei ') go to Jerusalem and undergo great suffering at the hands of the elders and chief priests and
scribes, and be killed” (16:21; cf. 17:12, 22-23; 20:18-19; 26:2). Accordingly, when Peter
challenges this divine mandate, Jesus charges Peter with failure to “set his mind on divine
things” (t a; t o u' qeou ': 16:23). And in Gethsemane Jesus once again confirms this divine
mandate as he identifies the reason for his arrest (26:56): “But all this has taken place, so that the
scriptures of the prophets may be fulfilled.” Thus even when the Jewish and Roman leaders
succeed in what they believe to be their own designs to subvert justice and achieve their political
goals, Matthew portrays these leaders in ironic fashion as unknowing actors in God’s own
divinely-initiated plan to “save his people from their sins” (1:21) through the person of Jesus of
Nazareth, who is in truth “the Messiah, the Son of God” (26:63; cf. 27:40, 43, 54).
The Politics of Violence. The ultimate power that the political leaders of Matthew’s
narrative can wield is the power of violence, reflected in the arrest, mockery, torture, and death
of their victims. This power is genuine and fearsome. Herod the king (2:1-23) carries out a
brutal massacre of young children in Bethlehem (2:16), leaving the mothers of Bethlehem (and
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no doubt the fathers as well) in deep grief (2:17-18). Herod the tetrarch (14:1-12) arrests,
incarcerates, and finally decapitates John the Baptist (14:1-11), leaving his disciples to bury the
body and report the grim news to John’s successor, Jesus (14:12). Jesus himself is arrested by
his Jewish opponents (26:47-56), tried before Jewish and Roman judiciaries (26:57-66; 27:11-
26a), mocked and tortured by Jewish and Roman captors alike (26:67-68; 27:26b-31), and
executed by crucifixion on a Roman cross between two common criminals (27:32-38). And
Jesus warns his disciples that they too will encounter violent treatment from their own opponents
in future (5:10-11; 10:16-23; 23:34, 37; 24:9-14), just as the prophets and righteous people
before them have likewise suffered (5:12; 17:9-13; 23:29-31, 35). There can be no question that
the Jewish and Roman leaders of Matthew’s narrative wield violent power of major proportions.
But the power of violence, as genuine and fearsome as it may be, has distinct limits. And
Matthew’s ironic caricatures of the Jewish and Roman powerbrokers of his narrative come to
their climax as Matthew mocks the violent power that they wield and robs it ironically of its
potency. Those who mock and torture Jesus in fact do nothing more than proclaim his true
identity loudly through their words (26:67-68; 27:29, 41-43) and visibly through their actions
(27:28-30). As they announce publicly in their own mocking words, Jesus is indeed “Messiah”
(26:68), “King of the Jews/Israel” (27:29, 42), and “Son of God” (27:43).102
And those who employ the power of violence to kill their victims find their power of life
and death to be ultimately ineffective. Herod the king, who seeks to “destroy” the child (2:13),
loses his own life instead (2:19, 20), while the once-threatened child ends up alive and well in
Nazareth (2:23). Herod the tetrarch succeeds in killing John the Baptist (14:3-12) only to
discover, as he believes, that his nemesis has now “been raised from the dead” with accordingly
mighty “powers . . . at work in him” (14:1-2; cf. 13:58). And for the Jewish leaders, who
successfully accomplish their political goal to bring about the death of Jesus (26:3-5; 27:1-2) and
who ensure this political victory by setting a “guard” and “sealing the stone” in front of Jesus’
tomb (27:66), Matthew spares no irony. Not only does the “angel of the Lord” commandeer the
stone guarding the tomb, “rolling it back” and “sitting on it” (28:2). But in a narrative move
ironic to the core Matthew informs his readers that those who have been guarding the dead body
of Jesus “shake” at the sight of the angel and themselves “become like dead men” (28:4). And
102 Cf. 21:38, where the vineyard tenants in their own words proclaim the son of the vineyard owner as the “heir” ( kl hron ovm o ") to the vineyard.
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the Jewish leaders who have the power to orchestrate Jesus’ death are, at the same time,
powerless to keep Jesus dead and buried (28:11-15). Those who exercise the deadly power of
violence find themselves massively outmaneuvered by divine initiative (28:1-4) and totally
impotent vis-à-vis the power and the will of God to bring the dead to life (28:1-10, 16-20).103
Clearly, from Matthew’s perspective, the exercise of violence as a political strategy is
profoundly limited in its effectiveness.
Failed Leadership. As the evidence indicates, the deep-rooted irony of Matthew’s
portrayal of the political leadership exercised by the Jewish and Roman powerbrokers within his
narrative lies in a twofold failure on their part. On the one hand these political leaders fail to act
with integrity in the execution of their legitimately assigned leadership roles. Roman imperial
leaders exercise their power by “lording it over others” and acting as “tyrants” (20:25). And they
achieve their political goals more often than not by suppressing justice (27:18, 19, 23, 24-26) and
employing deadly violence against innocent people (cf. 2:13-23; 14:1-12; 27:31b-38). Jewish
leaders, for their part, show themselves to be “hypocrites,” who “do not practice what they
teach” (23:3) and who live pious lives not out of concern for “mercy” (9:13; 12:7; 23:23) but
rather out of the self-aggrandizing desire for public recognition and praise (23: 5-7). They
likewise fail to live out the intermediary role between God and the people to which they have
been called as leaders (27:3-4; 41-46). Instead they effectively abandon their charge and leave
the people “harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd” (9:36).
But this is not the extent of their failure, as Matthew makes vividly clear through his
narrative rhetoric. If the political leaders of Matthew’s narrative fail in the execution of their
legitimately assigned tasks, they likewise fail, demonstrably and ironically, in the execution of
their own nefarious schemes and misguided political initiatives. While they do indeed have the
power to effect real evil in the real world (2:16; 14:1-12), their power is ultimately far more
limited than they ever imagine (see section two above). The evil that they instigate through their
political initiatives is at most penultimate in its impact104 and in the end completely impotent vis-
à-vis the genuine and overwhelming power of God (28:11-15 cf. 28:1-10/16-20). In the end the
political leaders of Matthew’s narrative, both Jewish and Roman, demonstrate profound and
103 On the irony of Matthew’s resurrection account see Dorothy Jean Weaver, “Matthew 28:1-10,” Interpretation 46:4 (October 1992), pp. 398-402. 104 Cf. 10:28, where Jesus challenges his disciples, “Do not fear those who kill the body (to; s w'm a) but cannot kill the soul (th;n y u c hv n ).”
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ironic failure in their exercise of political power—both in their sins of omission and in their sins
of commission—even as they exercise the considerable power of their respective offices. And
through this ironic portrait of the exercise of political power within the world of his narrative
Matthew issues a sharp and unmistakable challenge to the powerbrokers of his own world, and
by centuries of extension, to the powerbrokers of our world as well.
III. “It Will Not Be So Among You”: Toward A Matth ean Model for Political Leadership
In the above discussion I have sketched out Matthew’s wide-ranging critique of the
political leadership exercised by the Jewish and Roman powerbrokers within his narrative. To
sketch out Matthew’s contrasting portrait of positive political leadership would require an
equally wide-ranging study of the character of leadership exhibited by Jesus and the characters
associated with him (the prophets, John the Baptist, Jesus’ disciples). But such a task lies well
beyond the scope of the current essay and begs for further attention in a follow-up study. Here I
offer merely a few basic pointers toward the thematic of such a study.
1) A primary question for consideration concerns the underlying vision or calling that
gives character to the political leadership exercised by Jesus within Matthew’s narrative. This
question focuses, accordingly, on the central characteristics of the “kingdom of heaven” and the
associated character portrait of God, the ruler of this domain. This question also includes
attention to the specific “calling” of Jesus as reflected in the Matthean accounts of his baptism,
temptations, and transfiguration.
2) A second question for consideration concerns the demonstrated character of Jesus’
political leadership patterns within Matthew’s narrative. This question includes attention to
Jesus’ basic leadership strategy of appointing and training disciples, to the overall character of
Jesus’ healing ministry, and to such central motifs of Jesus’ teaching ministry as “love of God
and neighbor,” “compassion”/ “mercy,” “servant leadership,” and Jesus’ rejection of violence by
himself or his followers as an acceptable “modus operandi” within the “kingdom of heaven.”
3) A third question for consideration concerns the demonstrated effectiveness and/or
impact of Jesus’ political leadership patterns as narrated within Matthew’s story. This question
includes attention to the specific effectiveness/impact of Jesus’ “disciple-making” strategy as
well as to the ultimate effectiveness/impact of Jesus’ overall mission within the Jewish/Gentile
community depicted in Matthew’s narrative.
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Conclusion: “All the Kingdoms of the World”
As becomes clear from a search of the evidence, the narrative rhetoric of Matthew’s
Gospel pronounces sharp and uncompromising judgment on the political powerbrokers within
Matthew’s narrative, both Jewish and Roman. In the face of this potent political critique, what
then does it mean for us to read Matthew’s Gospel in our own world? And how does Matthew’s
narrative rhetoric assist us in reflecting on the exercise of political power within our 21st-century
global village? Here I have neither time nor space to offer more than a biblical handful (seven!)
of very basic observations that point toward the discussion that must take place among all those
who read Matthew’s Gospel as Scripture.
1. Within the “kingdoms of the world” political power is regularly put to use for evil
purposes. Matthew’s narrative rhetoric confirms for us what we already know from our own
21st-century world of experiences.
2. The task of Jesus’ followers in response to abuse of power is the urgent and dangerous
political task of speaking truth to and about the powerbrokers of the world. What John the
Baptist and Jesus show us, among other things, is the courageous witness of those who directly
address the abuses of the leadership of their day (14:1-12; 23:1-39).
3. The followers of Jesus will suffer for daring to speak truth to power. People can get
killed for such audacity. John the Baptist and Jesus are prime examples of such people (14:1-12;
26:1-27:54).
4. Jesus’ followers are called to respond in nonviolent fashion as they encounter
suffering. Jesus himself sets the example for them (26:47-56) and calls them in turn to “love
[their] enemies” (5:44) and “not to resist” those who are “evil” (5:39).
5. Justice belongs to God. It is the task of God, and not that of the followers of Jesus, to
redress the wrongs of history (21:33-46; 22:1-10; 28:1-20).
6. The “kingdoms of the world” have far less power than they (and we!) imagine that
they do. Witness the ways identified above in which such powers fail at their own evil tasks.
7. God’s resurrection power trumps all human powers. And God’s resurrection power
always has the last word. The story of Jesus’ resurrection (28:1-20) is God’s last laugh (Ps. 2:4;
cf. 2:1-3) at all the pretensions of human power.
I conclude my study with a personal journal reflection on the exercise of political power,
a story recounted in the spring of 1996, as I was a Visiting Scholar at Tantur Ecumenical
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Institute, right up the hill from the Israeli military checkpoint leading to Bethlehem. This story
speaks of words from John’s Apocalypse. But this story could just as well speak of the words of
Matthew’s narrative:
April 7, 1996, Tantur. Saturday evening was the Easter Vigil at St. Anne’s Church, just inside the Lion’s Gate. And it was well into Easter Sunday morning before we got home and got to bed! But there was not much “rest for the weary”! Jennifer had planned an Easter sunrise service to be held on the roof, that amazing vantage point from which we can not only look over to the mountains of Moab in Jordan, just across the Jordan Valley, but also and much more closely, directly down into the Israeli checkpoint on Hebron Road, just below Tantur! This was the place our service needed to be! We needed to claim and proclaim the Resurrection right here on this border location, with the signs of the military occupation both visible and audible just down below! It was a lovely service, very simple and reflective, with scriptures and recorded music and time for reflection. And the sun came up beautifully and passed through a tiny “slit’ between the earth and the cloudbank above it. But the most powerful moment of all came at the end of the service. As the last piece of music Jennifer had chosen the Hallelujah Chorus. And there it was, right up above the checkpoint, that most visible sign of present oppression and occupation and military might, there it was, this incredible, powerful declaration about “the Lord God Omnipotent who shall reign for ever and ever” and “the kingdom of this world which has [already!] become the kingdom of our Lord and of his Christ”! I stood at the railing and looked down into the checkpoint and simply exulted in the wonder of it all! What an enormous gift and what a powerful word of courage!
Dr. Dorothy Jean Weaver
Professor of New Testament
Eastern Mennonite Seminary, Harrisonburg, VA 22802-2462
October 14, 2008
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